Newspaper Page Text
i " ...j. DE3EIHgr EVENING NEWBi SATUTIDAT, yoVEMTtER 12, 3802. w f v No. 36 Main St. X s , ,i . r We are just in receipt of an Elegant Line of w LADIES' DRESS FLANNELS, from the Mills. We have a large V 'j assortment of LADIES' FLANNEL WAISTS, and our All-Wool Hosiery are . r far superior to the imported. Buy Provo Mills Woolen Goods and get the best. V , i ; J- - ' I Ji6.CUTLER St BRQ. i Provo Woolen JMLill . I i J I w We make MEN'S SUITS to Order from Provo Mills ALL-WOOL CASSIMERE for $20.00 to ' Fyf f X $25.00. Satisfaction Guaranteed. We have an immense stock of Blankets, Flannels, x V . kW . , Linseys, Cassimeres, Shawls, Jeans, Yarns, Overshirts, Uutiderwear, etc. r i ' V y? WHOLESALE AND RETAIL .f- T I .'i j No. 36 Main Street yr - --C - L . "X", 1 SALT LAKC CITY. f " ftefr UNION iljji PACIFIC HSYSTEM. I THE THR00GHCiR HUE. ; Lincrirc ocr. liiii, isa. , ' Titlni Jmt. anil Jtyorl .1 C4 ioU Oil "", follou! I AMUYt fron all Faita re potm. , i-oaere ' I torn llutte,! orUaad sad tea rraa. Froia Tut city U4 Cache Telle,... 10 M m 'ran ill Ea.teni p-'-l- 11 40 p m j I 'om Cecil. Valley end Oitdoa .. 111! via , I .Final milord til loleiraodlale !; FromJuan endltnreae.. SlOpta F ''omflenDlubaandTootle.., ...... 4 Miopia UlTAItT. 1 Fr an iatern point.. t ro a ra lor Ojd.u and Intermediate point.. 6 J a in 1 JTorltslt.. rortlnnd.Bea IranclKo 1 " Cache Valley- 1941am For Cache l!r and 1-ere Cltf . i.M n f For all Keiletnpoiate and Ban rraa- tlwo 3n j 3rori,crcaa,JuetiaadMllford J 4le ta For Juab aad Intermediate petal... 4 5) pro ForTooel. and T.rrolno. .,. Jill a n liaitj, Sunday, oicepted. tTtalna between Juab and llilford do not run fnadaja. nv TicurTiirt'irr, 101 hiaiw f II. a, IIUULK1, utnl Airt. '.r Hopl. It. II. OiH, II. . and Uen. Utr. I. DlcalmoH. ai.'l C.aIUr. E. I. Loiui, a 1'. at T. aftat. i RIO GMNDB KajM WESKRH. BKamittSaW CIIIHHT TIKI UUI In U.rt Anuti.t 3)1. IKaj. Mcim a. it uia Xo.1 rorrrorn.ur.nd Junuutmand allimnu ra.1. . ! po a.ra. o.I'-rot lrovo.ljr.nd Junction and alltoinl. Kiil,,,,,.. tupiu. ho. 6 Tor lroro. ray.un,Kurha aud uxruiir Upm. ' ho. 8-rot liiaitam, IroTO, Uantl, andfalma.... . .,.IOtn. o ft rorunn and pnlnta K HU Wiia x, B-rot tliden and Wa.l .... ..11 M p in. ho 1-ror Uydan and Iho Wa.t..Mltil9a.iu. , Ko.1 From Iroru, (Jrand Junction ,1 audttoKa.tM....M.MmlliDSata. I rto. a-rroto lruro urand Junction 'I and tut Kau.mWM.MW . .11 is n.m. 1 O.J-Irou lroro. 1 ayaoa. Kraka V I k and tMlvrrUttr. ...... ...... tOtlOam, 1 o. ft-rrom lllmrbain, 1 royo, Uantl, an In. una Mra , ho. I rrom Oiid.n and the w t.l.Mm T M a.m. ii. 4 fiom f). l.n mid Hi. W ..I . it5 p u. l'utliiian Talaca filcepar oa all tbroiuilt traia. KoenauKaaj alo.acoanacUoal. tlatclr, vp.ad and comfort. llfk.llttllP. c "nnm ,i. , I D.C.UnUUK.A.OMUlT JILIJIKXETT ! 4laa.alaL.. Can. aupt. iaa.l'.4tl.agk , SIAT.lt 11KM' WAMKI). CSfC I" W Mil DAyATIIOMK.BICILlNa !?'-'. JIl,!i,m lalar aad llatmit J.welry, I VV.u Ml. laUevara, .10, llatua iht Unci ol Mt .old .ii..rirnlel Moe.i .ilcnce. Mc W 11 . Vri.tJuh "" nccdmitpl.l tl. 11, L. UtUu A UU , Columtu., O. aal Unlike ihe Dutch Process (2ft No Alkalies jll BreakfastCocoa IW I nil 1jHinr(Aa..,Ar(J..iM (J 1 If 1 1 'l"'l"o'0nc4aaiolnv -iwiji J?'"' l,l'f,' -Airowroot or rtomleAl. roaiflMj; oi (Aon nut rn( u run It ! cMlcioJ, nourUhlnn, aol BAIU.T moid bruntr-m irjttktr. 7. DAKHl &C0.( .Dorchester, Man. WASHBURN Ia?i jp Cullait. MaadollratiZlthcti txWVy laTblaniaaadqa.llircftoB.ara SrnrVyl' fckvlj t'Falllcadloa'dcal.ra. IlekQ- jtVjTH. Ilfaly lllu.trat.d Kuv.alr cat ' ariLia will bo Mulled I'lTl't, 'LYON K HEALY, CHICACO. UM)nUTAl!KIlB. " ZSTJBLISIliD, l$c. JoepS E. mpt, Plonoer Uudortaker ol Utah. Vaimac(ertr enif fitltr fe Al JTIaf. e i,lI. IK, irevd and CM Cnnti COFFINS AND CASKETS. Inll Line ofrolllu Intnl. Iilau. kept r.iietK.llr an haniL rlfpAen and Til graph OrJtrt promptly fllltA. r Hitlra preaarTtJ In their Natural Condi tloa wubout vatra f narie. OPEN PAy'aNO NIQHT. il"lLV:i Ho. 253 E. First Soitl, Oo and a half bltcls eait of Tbiatra. TXlKFltV.St: .Sv, TA Joseph William Taylor UTAU'I LllDltO . UNDERTAKER AND EMBALMER. Carry t Largut and ituft CompUU St. I tf COFFINS, .-. GASKETS, And Undertaken' Goods In Utih. Fn.t.wt and Jlttalt l Immtmtlit JttJuctA I'rtvfl, Vcitir man tetrt f ft- iftrtJ tn I (4. UTS MB'CIIVES 7:i.V,iiV.c-- Ml prtcrljWel llif or A loll In It. Jtorlol loillbl. Ilm i ornca aifD waataooiia nana cLoaiD. ' Noi.aiandM WC3T TEMPLE STBEET. ;1 .r.O.UMBJa. 9lrt9M Ml. tv JAPANESE We Hereby Promise To rcfiiittl nil niimcj i.ilil ut for Haller's Remedies IT ion am nut BENEFITED liy lliflr USE. 'I'luso lira p tr.itl'iiiH lomlstut SURE CURB C3U5B STftUP. AUSTRALIAN SALVE, SLOSD FUHIFIEE, PAW FAJULYZEB, .ARSAPARILIA ul BDRDKK (Cbjk:.) COSOITlCSt FaWBERS. bars wire mm, coasrccAs,. illllE 6ERXAH TILLS. am nrn AIBOWTEtr GUARAKTEED by un. NO CUKE, NO W. You luko u. Cll llll'i . lor tulo liy nil llriiKtllata. DCST"bAK TANNED Leather Belting. A. O. COOK .C A'O.V, Hi Market St., hit rlUU'IsCU, CaI. CHDRcTJAiS Printed and for 8a. t THE DESERET NEWS OFFICE; SALT LAKE GUY Cult n.pom coc.iw, Wwd BirU Ko. UUot .ftoclvt; Bfporlat Mtv rrtrawf AMrtolfttioa foru x, T.L.M. LI Hvporti 3t, T.U.U I. A lUL-jrU. X. BJm' 0rtl1etl ,,,,, ,..,.9li kiiMlMinisnd,b)ohc( U, IO0, of 1UI9 rniutrr AwooUUoa Hall ul RManl Uoaxa, Itta, t L. U I. A. HqU ana Uooord Book. 1 10. 4vMhMnrd,iqf ,Ruo, lrHa.C0i IVttlMt niAjt. Hlwta BraU Haul to Ot4m 4tuhm ftMwda Ma to (1a f l For Younger Readers. Short Storiks for Little Folks. Croolnl Joo. M IcuU .rnaWc) A Rrcat r.illroid ilcpot may not be the best school for a boy, yet poor little Joe Hrjanhvl scarcely knoun any other. lie could not remember when the Ions waiting room, ulth llirir tiled lloors and dreary tott n ol atatlonary scltces, and croud or hurrjlnn people, Merc not (ullc as famllUr to him mid more home like thin hi mother' small, bare house, uhlchhekneiv ai little more than a pj.ice for enting and sleeping At an age when nn ordimry btbe inlKhthavo been frlKhtcned Into con vulsions by the shriek cf a locomotive, Joe, securely riricncd In his cab, would Mire lor hours through the great win dow, undisturbed by the Incessant rush and roar of arriving and departing trains. Ho had only been six months old when the ilrcidfnl accident happened which, at one fell stroke, mtdu hint fatherless and transformed him front a strong, wel!-de eloped Intuit to a piti ful creature, which een death rcfusLd to take. The old jardmen tell the story cen et how young Michael llrjan, as straight and manly a fellow as everltft bis green, old, nttive Maul for ihe belter chances of the new world this sldu of the sea, came whistling out of the roundhouse Hint morning and stepped htstily Irom an Incoming locomotive, neither seeing nor hearing another rush lug up the piralle! track. Ills males cried out to him too late! Nobody who saw It would cter forget the look of agony which distorted his handsome ficolnthat horrible Instint when he recognized his doom, or thu perpen dicular leap Into the air, from which he fell back beneath the crunching; wheels, In the excitement and consternation of the time no messenger had been sent In advance to prepare the poor joung wife for her trouble, and she stood Tn Ihe doorway with her baby crowing In her arms, when Ihe stout bearers paused at her gate with their mingled burden, hlic tillered a tenlhle cry and fell faint ing the child's tender back striking the sharp edge of the door stone. "What a pity that it was not killed outright'" said ever) body but tha mother. She herself ntv,ns Insisted that only her constant watching over the little dickering life kept her from going mad in the first dreadful months of lirr bereavement. The ofliceis of Ihe railway company wciuklndtu poor Mary Dr)a, They X2i a .i"W a paid the expenses of the huriil, and after little Joe had slowly mended, em ployed tier about the depot to scrub the lloors and keep the glass and wood work bright and neat. When Joe was seven )eirs old his mother sent him to school, lie went patiently, diy nfter day, miking no com plaint, but she. awoke suddenly one night to find him sobbing on the pillow beside her. Only by the illnt of long coaxing was she able to find out the cause of his gilef. .Some of the rougher bojs more thoughtless than cruel, let in hope had called him Humpy, nnd asked if he carried n bag of meal un bis back. Mary flamed with the fierce anger ol motherhood. "You slnn't go another day!" she de clired. "The Indians' I won't have my darlln put Upon by the likes of theml" ho Joe's schooling had come to nil un timely end Yet, meager ns was his stock ol book learning, the development of his mind far outstripped the growth of his stunl-d and deformed body. I'vcrvbody liked the nitlent little fellow, tugging manfully at his mother's heavy water buckets, and running will ingly at every call of the station men. At twelv e ) ears old he had picked up no small amount of Informitlon, especlilly on railroad topics. He knew every locomotive on thu roid, understood the intricacies of sidetracks and switches, nnd could tell the prcclte moment when any pirtlcular train might be expected with the accuracy of a time table. Yet the very quickness and ardor of Ills nature deepened the sense of his Infirmity. The glances cast upon blm by stranger ces, aome pitiful, some curious, others, nlasl exprtsslvc only of annoyance or disgust, rani led like so nnny arrows In his hurt, not one missed its mirk. How wistfully hN eyes follow ed bois of his own nge straight, Inndsome, happy who sprang llghlly up and down the steps of thecoiches.or threaded their way along the crowded platforms. 1 or one ilny of such perfect, uulramrlled life ho would have birler ed all Ihe possible )cars before him. Yil believer put hi yearning Into words, even to his mother. "Crooked Joe' a rum 'un," sildone i Ills rough acquaintances "IIu sensis hi trouble w ell enough, but be don't let on to nobody." Mr. Crump, the telegraph operator, was Joe' constant friend. It was lie who, nt odd moments, had tiught the boy to rend, nnd bad Initiated him Into some of Ihe mysteries of the ticking instrument, which to Joe's Iniaginitlve mind seemed somo strange creature with a hidden life of its own. It was growing dark one November afternoon. Joe never nn unwelcome isltor sat curled In a corner of Mr. Crump's office, waiting for his mother to finish her work. He was lihorlously spelling out, by the fading light, the words upon n page of an Illustrated newspaper, quite oblivious of the tick ing, like that of a lerky nnd rheumatic clock, which mounded in the room, Mr. Crump, too, had n papi'r before him, but his cars were alive, buddenly he sprang to his feel, repeating aloud the message which that moment flashed along the wire. "i nglnc No. no running wild. Clear track.' " lie rushed to the door shouting the news. , "Not a second to rparcl She'll be down in seven minutes " ihe words passed like lightning. In a moment the vard was in a wild com motion. Men flew hither nnd thither, yard engines steamed wildly awa), the switches closing behind them. The main track was birely eleir when 1 10 came In sight, swaying from side to side, her wheels threatening to leave the track at each revolution. She passed Ihe depot like a meteor, her bell clang lig with every leap of her piston, the steam escaping from iter whistle with the continuous shriek of a demon, and the occupants of the cab wrapped from view in a cloud of smoke. Some hundred rods beyond the depot the track took a sharp, upward grade, from which it descended again to strike the bridge across a narrow but deep and rocky gorge. Men looked nflcr the dying locomoliv c and then at each with blanched faces. "They're gonel A miracle can't sive 'em," said one, voicing the wordlcs ter ror of the rest. "If they don't liy the trick on the up-grade they'll go down ns soon ns they strike the trestle." The crowd began to run along the track, some with a vain Instinct of help fulness, srme moved by that morbid curiosity which seeks to be "mat the deith." I!ut lookl Mldnaythc long rise In the speed of the runaway mglne suddenly slackens. "What does it mean' She never could 'a' died out In that limel" shouted an old yardman. Incitement winged their feet. When the foremost runner reached Iho place the smoking engine stood still on her track, nuiveiing in every sleel clad m.re, her great wheels stilt whiizing round nnd round nmld a flight of red sparks from beneath. "What did It? Who stopped Iter?" T he engineer, staggering from the cab with the pallid face of Ihe fireman behind Mm, pointed, without speaking, to where a btllu palcfjiccil, etooked bicked boy had , .. i'nwn, panting with exertion, lit i i trick. ftt his feet it i j I van lay over turned nnd impiv Tho crowd s it, one at another, open mouthed, i'l , n the truth Hashed upon them, "He oiled the trail.l" "Dully for Crooked Joel" They caught the cxhiustcd child, flinging him from shoulder to shoulder, striving; w lilt mch other for the honor of bearing him back lo the depot nnd set him down among them. "Im the hat, p irdsl" cried one. It had been payday, nnd the saved en gineer and fireman dropped in eacli their month's wages. Not a hand In nil the throng that lld not delve Into pock tt. There was the crbn rustle of hills, the chink of gold md silver coin. "Out with your Inndkerchlef, Joel our hands won't hold it nil I why, voung one, what' Iho matter?" for the boy, with scarlet checks and burning eye, had clenched both smill hinds behind his back the poor twisted back laden with its burden of deformity and pain. "No! no'" ho cried, In a shrill, high voice. '-Don't pay mcl" Can't you see what it's worth to me, once lust once In my life to be a Utile use like other folks?" , Tho superintendent had come from his ofhee. I le laid his hand on the bey's head "Joe," he said, "we couldn't payyoa if we wished. Money docsn t ply lor liv est Hut you hive gnvidus n crest mmy dollirs besides. Won't you let us do something for oil?" "You can't! S'ou cnn'll Nobody can!" The child's volcu wis almost i shriek. It seemed tn rend the air with the pent up agony of years. " There s only one thing in the world I want, and nobody can give me that. Nobody cm ever make me anything but Crooked Joel" The superintendent lifted hlui and held him agilnst his own breast. ".My boy," lie said, in bis firm, gentle tones, 4 you are light. None of us can do that for y on. Hut j ou can do it ) our self. Listen to niel Where Is the quick br.dn God give vou nnd the brave heart? Not In tint bent back of yours -that has nothing tn do with thcml Let us help you to a chance only a chance to work and to learn and it will test with you, yourself, to siy whether In twenty yens from now, If you nte alive, if you are Crooked Joe or Mr. Joseph Hrynn!" ' Visiting In C not long ago, a friend said to mc: "Court Is in session. You must go with me and hear llryan " Tho court room was already crowded nt our entrance with nn expectant audi ence. When the brilliant young attor ney rose to make his plea I noticed with n shock ol surprise that his noble head surmounted an under-sired and mlsslnpcn body. He had spoken hut five minutes, however, unen I had ut terly forgotten the physical defect; In ten I was eagerly interested, and there after, limine the two hours' speech. held spell bot nJby theimrvellotiseloauence which Is fast raising him lo the leader ship of his profession In his native city, ' A wonderful mini" said my friend, ae we walked slowly homeward. Then lie told me the story of Crooked Joe. Iho Mllvrr I lute. JVftf Story tn t9 .Vew Tort: I ttoriltr. Katllleinsel was the son ol a poor shoemaker. Doth of Ills parents were Germans, and although he was an American boy, be had already heard so much of the fathcrhnd thit he was ten year old before he understood tint the homo of his birth was the one he ought to love thu best. It must have been the blood of some musical ancestor coursing through Ills veins when iuvely melodies whispered In his cars and sounded Irom his helov ed llutc, v hlcli was Ills constant companion. Ills teacher wis nn old soldier, who taught Ihe boy from pure love nnd pride in lus utt. T he dearest possession the old soldier had was n sliver flute, a legacy left him by n nobleman In his own country, to whom he had been teacher for many years. On this flute Karl had always taken his lessons. Hut the boy's ambition was fired, he dreimed night and day of n silver Unto of his own, and many were the plani he had for making money, that he might some diy buy one, One day when he was talking of It nt dinner his father u hi crossly: "Your ginndf.ither played in Ihe orchestra of ilje Klnc's theater for twenty five years, and hl was satisfied with such ii ilulo as other people had; why should joti deslru lo squander money on any thing so far above' your station! ' Jlut his mother spoke un fol lilm, saying. "My husband, you forge! we are not in the other country. If uu' (Cur dulled on pupa IS,)